It is podcast mania this week! I am delighted to have these 3 sci-fi/fantasy authors on the show as all of them release their next podcast novels on 11 November. What does this mean for you? 3 brand new podcast novels to listen to – PLUS top tips on how to write sci-fi/fantasy novels in time for NaNoWriMo!

Who each of these podcast novelists are, what they have written and what they are releasing on November 11

The “triple-threat push” is a way to release 3 books on the same day and use cross-promotion to get a great audience for these novels

Podcasting is a great way to promote your books. There is so much text available on the internet that having an audio/podcast helps you stand out. The “first wave” podcasters like Tee Morris and Scott Sigler were getting more attention than a new/midlist author, so others joined in.

Podcasting creates fantastic interactivity with the audience. Feedback from fans is almost instantaneous so authors can find out whether there is an audience and what they think.

Podcasting is a marketing laboratory. Thousands of hours of market research vs. a by product of marketing your own podcast fiction

Podcasting is lots of fun! Full casts, composers, sound effects – quite the audible movie! Great for the community, you get to work with other podcasters as voice talents

You don’t have to be incredibly technical to be a podcaster. Check out Podcasting for Dummies, or read columns on Podiorackets blog for bare minimum of technical knowledge so you are not too frustrated.

What the new novels are about: ‘The Anthithesis Progression’ is a spy thriller in revolutionary world, the war begins (check out the trailers at the end of the podcast). Metamor City is Bladerunner meets High Fantasy, technology synthisizing with magic. Digital Magic is the story of a fey stuck in the modern world, a cyber-punk fairy story.

Tips for writing sci-fi / fantasy for NaNoWriMo

The importance of research. World building setup – physics/magic. Do not violate your internal rules. You must keep the integrity of the world you are creating.

Stories are about people. It doesn’t matter what world they are in, you still need to have good, interesting, colourful characters. Real people with real, interesting problems. Don’t reduce people to cardboard stereotypes.

Mine history ruthlessly. Reading a lot and finding out quirks in societies and cultures adds depth to your writing.

A discussion on “Great writers steal” T.S Eliot. Standing on the shoulders of giants and finding ideas/inspiration for your work (not plagiarism!)

Movies and TV shows for sci-fi are more popular with special effects now. Visual writing is good to do anyway, and if there are film/TV rights, all the better! Keep an eye on the possible adaptation as film rights options can bring in the money.

Some recommendations for more sci-fi / fantasy information for writers: Podiobooks.com has many speculative fiction authors. io9 is a great sci-fi blog, and you can also pick an author you like and then jump onto their blogroll or listen to the promos in their podcast.

Listen to the trailers at the end of the podcast (Link to Pip’s to come soon)